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Major's Frustration
A roundup
of the past two weeks' good news from Iraq.
BY ARTHUR CHRENKOFF
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 12:01 a.m. EDT
Opinion Journal (from The Wall Street Journal opinion page)
Maj. Joe Leahy is a civil engineer with the U.S. Army's
Engineer Brigade. He has been stationed at Camp Victory, outside of Baghdad,
since November 2004--enough time to get frustrated. "We all know it's a
dangerous place," he says. "But the thing that I want people to
understand is that they only see those one or two instances in the country that
are negative. You don't really hear about the 100 things that have gone
good."
He
adds, "One thing we've got to understand is that it's not going to happen
tomorrow, but we are doing something that's getting better every day."
Leahy's
good-bad ratio may be debatable, but many servicemen and their families and
friends back home, not to mention the general public, have been getting
frustrated lately with the media coverage of Iraq--enough so to cause some
limited, though still welcome, soul-searching
among major media outlets. Whether the coverage will improve as a result
remains to be seen. In the meantime, here are the past two weeks' worth of
stories, some of which you might have missed.
• Society.
Some Sunnis don't like the proposals, but that's democracy. There's
certainly nothing like a major political disagreement to motivate people to engage in
the political process:
Angered by
Shiite calls for a federal region, Sunni clerics urged followers
. . . to vote against the constitution if it contains measures they
believe would divide the country. . . .
Iraq's three major Sunni organizations
appeared to have taken a united stand both for voting and against demands for
federalism after they boycotted the Jan. 30 parliamentary
elections. . . .
Sheik Mahmoud al-Sumaidaie, of the
influential Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, told worshippers at Baghdad's
Umm al-Qura mosque to register for the upcoming votes because "we are in
need to your voice to say 'yes' for the constitution or 'no.' "
Such voices are growing
louder and increasingly representative of the whole Sunni community:
The general
conference of Sunnis in Iraq, which includes "the Sunni Mortmain,"
"the Association of Muslim Scholars," "the Iraqi Islamic
Party," and a group of Sunni parties and organizations, was held in
Baghdad and has urged all Arab Sunnis to participate in the coming elections.
In his speech before hundreds of
attendees, Ahmed Abdel Ghafur Al Samera'i said, "Participating in the
plebiscite on the constitution is a prescribed duty for all Sunnis."
He added, "I swear to Allah that the
greatest privilege, through which you gain the love of Allah, is your efforts
in participating in the coming elections and gathering the Sunnis, hoping that
Allah would alleviate their suffering."
Alaa Maki, member of the political bureau
in the "Iraqi Islamic Party," has confirmed, "The party has
suggested the provision of cities of Sunni majority with additional lists, so
that everyone would be able to register their information in the electors and
plebiscite on the permanent constitution records."
He added, "We would enter the
elections with a heavier weight than some people imagine. We would continue in
participating in the political process side by side with the constituents of
the Iraqi people." He referred to the existence of some misunderstanding
among the political blocs, with regard to the elections' law and the mechanism
of executing them. He called all Imams and preachers to direct and urge people
to participate in the plebiscite on the permanent constitution and participate
in the coming elections.
Check out the flier the Islamic Party, is distributing, which aims to
convince Sunnis that voting is a religious duty. What a difference a few months
can make.
There's also a change of
mind in this former trouble spot:
After boycotting the previous elections,
Falluja is preparing to participate in the referendum on the constitution.
Falluja's clerics council advised the Imams of the mosques and the people not
to miss this historical chance and to take part in it through the four centers
opened there. Community leaders and clerics organized lectures to educate the
people about the importance of their participation and that the constitution is
for the interests of all Iraqis, which will decide their identities.
Here's more from Fallujah:
All indications
showed that there is high percentage of people in the regions that boycotted
the last parliamentary elections are registering their names to participate in
the coming October referendum and the general elections next January, Laith
Kubba told the press.
In Fallujah, considered one of the major
hotbed of Iraqi insurgency, clerics of mosques called on the residents in the
city to participate in the constitution referendum scheduled to be held in mid
October.
They urged the residents through
loudspeakers to participate and say "no" to those who want to isolate
them from the political process.
The Iraqi Islamic Party, the largest
Sunni party, also distributed handouts calling on the people to participate the
referendum. Many of the residents showed support and desire to participate.
"I want to participate and I call on
the people of the city to do so because we do not want to let those who came
from the other side of the border to rule us again," said Mohammed Uthman,
a government employee.
"If we don't participate this time,
it means we let the present government to continue, and thus the real ruler
would be the Iranians and not the Iraqis," he added.
Four
registration centers have been opened in Fallujah.
The main Sunni terror group, Ansar Al
Sunna, and the Shiite radical Muqtada al-Sadr have both been calling on supporters to register to vote in the constitution
referendum:
[One] statement issued by six of the
seven Ansar groups promised that there will not be attacks against Americans on
the day of the referendum, "to protect those who go to vote."
"Voting is a jihad of words and is no different from the jihad of the
sword," the statement said. 'There are no objections to participation in
the referendum to show the world our strength and to defeat federalism."
Registration
is now in full swing:
The Independent
Supreme Commission for Elections has announced launching more than 500 centers
for registering electors in all Iraqi cities.
Farid Ayar, member of the commission
council said in a statement, "There are543 centers all over Iraq, of which
517 are currently working regularly." He pointed out, "The necessary
protection has been provided for the working centers. There are 26 closed
centers at present, due to the lack of sufficient security protection."
The U.S. Agency for International
Development has been helping to bring the constitutional debate to the people (link in PDF):
The Constitutional Dialogue program has
organized over 3,000 dialogues throughout Iraq, reaching almost 80,000 Iraqis
who also shared their opinions through 64,000 questionnaires. To date, 210
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have participated, including 151 NGOs
contracted by USAID and 59 NGOs working as volunteers. Feedback indicates that
the dialogues are achieving their dual purpose; to educate and consult the
public.
In other recent USAID initiatives:
Over the past
month, USAID arranged for 18 experts to provide assistance to the Iraqi
National Assembly's (INA) Constitutional Committee resulting in the production
of 72 topical papers in Arabic on issues including federalism, natural resource
allocation, human rights and electoral systems. . . .
The final constitutional dialogues were
conducted last week, reaching over 79,000 Iraqis in over 3,100
meetings. . . .
USAID representatives organized a
workshop to address the advantages and disadvantages of various electoral
systems.
USAID is also
helping the growth of the local government throughout Iraq:
USAID's Local
Governance Program (LGP) is promoting the organization of Local Government
Associations (LGAs) throughout Iraq. The LGAs will act as lobbying and advocacy
organizations to represent the interests of the local government without having
any authority to direct their operations. Recent activities included:
Past wrongs are
being righted:
Even a year ago,
the dusty, rolling hills north of Kirkuk were largely barren. But the horizon
has changed rapidly in recent months with a flurry of newly constructed cinder
block homes dotting the hillsides.
Thousands of returning Kurds have
transformed pockets of land around Kirkuk into small settlements--leading to
the rebirth of villages once emptied out by former dictator Saddam Hussein
under his "Arabization" plan to force out ethnic Kurds and Turkomen.
In this village, 15 miles northeast of
Kirkuk, hundreds of new houses have sprouted since January because the flow of
displaced Kurds returning to the area has grown steadily since the U.S.-led
ouster of Saddam in 2003.
"We are starting from the beginning
again," Mayor Abdul Samad Rahim Karim said. "God willing, we will
succeed in making Shwan better than before."
The returnees are a legacy from Saddam's
era, when the Ba'athist Party forcibly expelled tens of thousands of Kurds and
Turkomen and replaced them with Arabs from the south to consolidate government
control over oil resources and farmlands located in northern Iraq.
In other places, the Kurds' return, many
to squatter camps around the city, and their demands for restoration of their
property have provoked sharp protests from many Arabs as well as Turkomen in
the community.
The Ministry of
Immigration is working to restore
Iraqi citizenship to people who have lost it or been stripped of it in the
past. And trade unions, once banned, are reviving in Iraq.
In entertainment news, 2,000 hopefuls
sign up for the Iraqi "American Idol":
Many Iraqis
already obsessively watch "American Idol," a version of the original
British "Pop Idol" franchise, and a glitzy Lebanese copy called "Arab
Superstar" on free-to-air Arabic satellite channels.
But "Iraq Star" is a brave
indigenous effort to perk up the spirits of a depressed nation. The studio set
is spartan and drab, and there is no studio audience, though viewers are being
promised tinseltown touches when the finale is held in Beirut.
"We are trying to lighten the load
and problems Iraqis are going through," said director Wadia Nader during
recording of an episode this weekend in a Baghdad hotel.
"We had shows like this in the 1960s
when people were discovered on television. But since then, with so many wars,
Iraqis couldn't see this kind of thing," he added.
Another show
entertains and helps fight the insurgency at the same time:
Shattered glass,
body parts, a blood-splattered blue sedan: the grainy video pans over the scene
as Iraqi officers comb the site of a drive-by assassination.
It's "Cops" Iraqi-style, minus
the "Bad Boys" soundtrack but otherwise roughly modeled after the
American TV show.
Created to make government more
transparent, "The Cops Show" featuring Kirkuk officers in action is
the first of its kind in the country and is breaking new ground in Iraqi
television. A live call-in portion gives the public the chance to praise the
security forces or gripe about them.
Screened weekly on Kirkuk Television,
which broadcasts in this northern city of nearly 1 million people, "The
Cops Show" has opened the floodgates in a community long suppressed.
"During Saddam Hussein's time, it
was very different," station manager Nasser Hassan Mohammed said.
"You were unable to ask questions. You couldn't say anything bad about
police.
"Now people can call in directly.
Anyone has the right to do this. This is the difference now. This is
freedom."
The call-in portion, initially a novelty,
has become a staple of the show, and panelists field up to 30 calls per
segment, Mohammed said. And because Kirkuk is ethnically mixed, the show
switches among the languages spoken by Kurds, Arabs, Turkomen or Assyrians.
It took Iraqis a while to master the art
of the phone-in.
"But after more than a year, they
understand very well," Mohammed said.
There's also some much-needed
foreign help to preserve Iraqi historical heritage:
Denmark, Italy
and the United Nations have extended new grants to preserve ancient sites in
the southern Province of Dihqar [sic], the province's deputy governor, Ahmad
Ali, said.
Dhiqar is home to some of Mesopotamia's
best-known ruins, among them those belonging to the fabled Sumerian cities of
Ur and Larsa.
"An agreement has been signed with
the United Nations Development program to maintain and develop archaeological
and tourist sites in the province," Ali said.
He said Italy has allocated $450,000 for
the construction of "a cultural and information center in Nasiriya, the
provincial capital.
Dhiqar, with an area of 12,900 km square,
is a key southern province. Besides its archaeological riches, the province is
the site of major oil fields.
• Economy. An
International Monetary Fund report paints a picture of Iraq
beset by problems, but nevertheless with good prospects:
Iraq is
suffering from rampant inflation, endemic disease and falling oil production,
the International Monetary Fund said yesterday in its first review of the
country for 25 years.
Nevertheless, Lorenzo Perez, the IMF
director who oversaw the review, said that in the medium term he was
"quite optimistic" about the country's prospects, although this will
"depend on the level of oil prices."
"It is easy to overlook that the
establishment and maintenance of relative macro-economic stability in the midst
of violence is an achievement in itself," he added.
The IMF said sweeping reforms were needed
in almost every sector of the economy, which is thought to have halved in size
between 1999 and 2003, when the invasion occurred.
A formal agency will chase the investment dollar for Iraq:
U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) Administrator Andrew Natsios and Iraq's
Minister of Planning signed an agreement in Amman, Jordan, to establish the
Iraq Investment Promotion Agency, which will play a leading role in job
creation and economic development for years to come.
The agreement commits USAID to equip the
new agency's staff and train them in managing the organization and promoting
investment.
Support will be delivered through USAID's
Izdihar project, whose staff had worked with the Government of Iraq to develop
an investment promotion strategy that culminated in the signed agreement.
With the creation of the Iraq Investment
Promotion Agency, Iraq will join the more than 160 other countries with similar
agencies that compete for approximately $7 trillion annually in foreign direct
investment worldwide.
In addition, the work of the new agency
will help expand the markets for Iraq's domestic products and services,
stimulate economic growth and create new jobs at home.
Authorities are
taking some tentative steps toward privatization:
The Ministry of
Industry has set up a committee to register eight major state-owned companies
on the Baghdad Stock Exchange.
A statement faxed to the newspaper did
not say when these firms will go public but stressed that the move will not be
initiated until the ministry works out guarantees that tens of thousands of
employees that will keep their jobs.
The committee is currently evaluating
these companies and would advise the ministry on the price and number of shares
that will be available to the public at the Baghdad exchange.
Taha Ismael, who heads a central
commission charged with privatizing of state-owned companies, said the move
will cover four cement factories, a pharmaceutical firm, and three construction
enterprises.
"Employees will be given share
options which they can buy and pay for later," he said.
USAID is helping to bring the Iraqi accounting profession into the 21st century:
Sixteen Iraqi accounting and auditing
professionals recently received international accounting standards training in
Amman, Jordan, as part of the Izdihar project. The sixteen professionals, who
are members of accounting and auditing associations, university professors and
industry practitioners, will become the core group of trainers who will lead
seminars for more than 300 accounting students and industry professionals in
Iraq.
During more than a decade of isolation,
Iraq lost touch with international accounting standards, international
financial reporting standards, and ethical standards for accountants and
requirements for typical modern annual reporting for corporations. In order to
address these needs, the training of trainers program was developed to improve
the skills of Iraqi accountants, strengthen the accounting industry in Iraq and
enhance the accountability, transparency and usefulness of financial documents
used to make sound business management decisions.
Kurdistan
continues to boom:
Fly into Arbil,
the regional capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, and you feel that you have arrived in
another country.
It is the Kurdish, not the Iraqi, flag
that flutters from Arbil International Airport, Kurdistan's new, glass-fronted
"gateway" to the world, which saw its first flights from Dubai,
Beirut and Amman arrive last month.
The airport was built on a former
military base once used by Saddam Hussein's regime to bomb the Kurds of
Halabja.
Now it brings in investors. Businessmen,
scared away from other parts of Iraq, are coming to Kurdistan instead, and
helping its economy to take off.
"Before all we saw was war, and
planes bombing our cities and villages," says the airport manager, Kameran
Murad, who fought against the regime in the late 1980s.
"Now the aircraft are our link with
the outside world. Everything is changing."
Take the town of Suleimaniya. Its skyline
is dotted with cranes. Everywhere you look bulldozers are at work.
"Things are booming. The price of
land is ridiculous. It's just going up and up and up," says businessman
Bettin Saleh, who has two shops in a new mall.
"People have money, people are
spending it, they feel it's safe to spend--and build for the future."
And there's no shortage of labour, as
Arab Iraqis head north to join the Kurdish workforce.
"I'm here because it's dangerous
where I'm from and there are no jobs," says Aziz Abed Ali, from Baghdad.
"Here it is safe and there is work."
So does Najaf, thanks to religious tourism:
Property prices
in Najaf are being driven through the roof by the Shia visitors who have
flocked to its holy sites since the invasion of Iraq by Coalition forces.
Home to the shrine of Imam Ali, a cousin
of the prophet Mohammed and a revered figure in Shia Islam, Najaf is considered
a top pilgrimage site by members of the denomination.
These include millions living across the
border in Iran, who were unable to visit during the reign of Saddam Hussein.
The fall of his regime and accompanying
thaw in relations between the two countries has brought with it an influx of
pilgrims. And there are plans to spend 20 million US dollars on a new
international airport near Najaf, with the help of a low-interest loan from
Iran.
At the same time, local real estate agents
and entrepreneurs say they are doing a roaring trade.
"Those experienced in religious
tourism have started to buy land and buildings in order to turn them into
hotels and tourist villages," said Hussein Abdullah, who owns a real
estate agency. "They expect [that in the future] Iraq will be the focal
point in the world."
Iraq's economic links with other countries keep expanding:
International Finance Corporation (IFC)
considered the possibility of investing $210.3 million in the construction
project of cement works in Iraq with a productive capacity of 2.9 million tons
per annum. Also according to Russian analysis agency AK&M, IFC intends to
participate in the capital of new company by investing $8.3 million. The first
investment project in Iraq with participation of IFC was realized in finance
sector in November 2004 when IFC invested $35 million in the capital of Credit
Bank of Iraq.
The Baghdad Chamber of Commerce and its
Swedish counterpart have signed an agreement for the establishment of a joint chamber
of commerce to foster economic and other cooperation between the two
countries. There is also some input from other European countries:
A group of German and European companies
has asked the ministry of labor and social affairs to employ 5278 unemployed
workers to employ them in projects that those companies planning to start in
Iraq. The (RIRP) group-companies have asked the ministry to provide them with
workers and the department of job finding in the ministry has started to
provide the needed numbers.
Iraq's foreign debt, accumulated to a
massive extent by Saddam, is being progressively written off. The latest
country to partially forgive Iraq's debt is Romania, which has reduced liability by 80%, from $2.5
billion to $500 million. Bulgaria is writing off $340 million of Iraqi debt and
extending the repayment of the remaining 80% by 20 to 25 years.
Oil production and exports continue to improve:
Iraq has stepped
up oil production from its southern oilfields by 300,000 barrels per day (bpd)
to 2.3 mln bpd, a spokesman for the state-owned South Oil Company told Agence
France-Presse.
"Production from the southern
oilfields has been increased to 2.3 mln barrels per day from today," said
Samir Jassem Masquqi.
Southern Iraqi oil production was
previously 2 mln bpd, of which 1.5 mln barrels were exported and the rest used
for domestic consumption.
Iraq produces and exports from 450,000 to
550,000 bpd from its northern oilfields.
Oil Minister Ibrahim Bahr al-Ulum said
last week that oil exports and revenue had reached their highest levels since
March 2003, when US-led forces invaded the country.
Crude exports rose 11 pct to 1.6 mln bpd
in July, compared to 1.44 mln barrels the month before.
Oil export revenues reached 2.5 bln
dollars in July, Ulum said.
In communications
news:
The Korean
government has expressed its readiness to supply Iraq with an internet
system, of a capacity of 10000 subscribers as a test system, in the field
of the mutual cooperation between the two countries.
This came during the visit of Dr. Javan
Fuad Masum, telecommunication minister, to the Korean embassy, where she met
the Korean ambassador to Baghdad.
The ambassador expressed his hope for
establishing a group of projects relating to the field of telecommunications,
including the development of an ADSL system, in specific. He promised to
provide Iraq with an internet system, in addition to training 10 technicians in
this field in Korea. The ambassador has promised to bear the responsibility of
erecting and operating the Korean exchanges (Samsung brand), which Iraq has
been provided with earlier.
Air travel
revives in Iraq:
If there's one
business that's quite literally taking off in Iraq right now, it's air travel,
with more and more Iraqis lining up to get out of their troubled land, either
for a break or forever.
Since resuming flights a year ago after
being grounded for 14 years by sanctions, Iraqi Airways now operates 20 flights
a week to destinations like Amman, Damascus, Istanbul and Dubai.
Many are fully booked, producing a hectic
scramble at Baghdad airport when the gate is called, as desperate passengers
clamber over one another to get to the front of the line.
Routes to Beirut, Cairo, Saudi Arabia and
Iran are expected to begin in the coming weeks, and a flight to London from
Basra or Baghdad is on the cards for late September or October.
"The expansion is going very
well," Captain Ali al-Bayaa, chief executive of the airline and a former
pilot, said on Thursday as he oversaw operations at Baghdad's airport, possibly
the most heavily defended airfield in the world.
"We should have a flight starting to
Cairo in the next 10 days, which will be very popular," he said.
For 18 months after Saddam Hussein was
toppled, the country remained too dangerous for commercial airlines, with
insurgents occasionally firing shoulder-fired missiles at aircraft.
Then Royal Jordanian began a regular
service to and from Amman, employing South African pilots and air crew to fly
the route, which involves a dizzyingly tight spiral take-off and landing in
Baghdad to avoid the threat of rocket attack.
Now, two and a half years after Saddam's
fall, there are half a dozen airlines jetting in and out of Baghdad, supplying
a rapidly growing demand for air travel. At the same time, travel agencies are
opening up again after years of inactivity.
International
flights return to Basra:
The first
international airline flight to land in the southern Iraqi city of Basra in 15
years arrived here yesterday [Aug. 22] receiving a warm welcome from local
officials. A Sharjah-based Phoenix Air Boeing 747 arrived from Dubai with 22
passengers on board.
The company will begin two flights a week
between Dubai and Basra, Iraq's second largest city, officials said.
"Hopefully flights to Iraq will increase from the region and the
world," said Basra's governor Mohammed Al Waili at the airport while
greeting the arriving passengers. Since the U.N. imposed economic sanctions in
1990 after Iraq invaded Kuwait, no foreign airline has flown to Basra.
Iraqi authorities
are now working to convert the Najaf airport from military to international commercial
use. Meanwhile, the first flight of Tigris Air from Iraq touched down in
Cairo. Flights between Iraq and Baku,
Azerbeijan, are planned. So are six flights a week between Syria and Iraq.
On the land, the specialists from the
state railway company are currently working on designs to link the Iraqi and the Iranian railway networks. Speaking of
railways, a major renovation effort is currently under way across the
country:
Ninety-seven
railway stations have been renovated by the Facilities & Transportation
(F&T) Sector of the Project & Contracting Office (PCO). The $42 million
railroad program has 28 more stations to complete.
Forty-one of the completed stations are
in northern Iraq throughout the governorates of Salah al-Din, Ninewa and
Tameem. . . .
Reconstruction work included electrical
work; plumbing, sanitation and water delivery system upgrades; roof repairs;
installation or repair of air conditioning units; and interior renovations such
as painting, plaster and tile work.
There are two main types of railway
stations under renovation: five-room crew stations used only by railway
workers, and nine-room passenger stations for use both by railway passengers
and railway workers, according to the PCO. Of the 97 railway stations to be
worked on by the PCO, approximately 22 are passenger stations; the rest are
crew stations only.
Currently the railway works out to be
about 30 percent passenger use and 70 percent freight use.
The railway stretches from southern to
northern Iraq, approximately 1,260 miles of track, with railway stations
appearing about every 15 miles.
One of the major stations under
renovation is Baghdad Station, currently scheduled for completion by early
December 2005. Other projects currently under construction include train
maintenance and repair shops in Kirkuk, Al-Samawa and Baiji, with another one
planned in Baghdad.
Station renovation work is a joint effort
between PCO, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Iraqi Republic
Railroads (IRR) and local Iraqi workers.
• Reconstruction.
In Baghdad, major telecommunications infrastructure will be rebuilt and
renovated:
As of October 1,
works would start on rehabilitating what has been destroyed, during the bombing
with American planes and rockets, of the telecommunication building and tower
in Al Ma'moun region, west of Baghdad, or what has been known as "Saddam
Tower" before April 9, 2003.
An Iraqi company would be in charge of
the reconstruction, while a European company from Luxemburg would set the new
designs for this building, which is considered as one of the most prominent
landmarks of Baghdad, according to Javan Ma'sum, Iraqi telecommunications
minister.
The minister added that the cost of
rehabilitating the building and the tower reaches 20 million dollars, which are
designated from the US aid to Iraq. She pointed out that a celebration would be
held in Baghdad on this occasion, where the start of works that would totally
depend on Iraqi expertise, would be announced.
Ma'sum noted that the design of the
building and tower would be totally changed, where modernization and touches
that reflect the Iraqi prospective of the project are domineering.
She said that the whole telecommunication
building in Al Senk region, on Al Rasheed Street in Baghdad, would be knocked
down, to be rebuilt later this year. This is due to the fact that the ministry
experts found out that the overhauling and rehabilitation of the building would
be more expensive than rebuilding it.
She noted that Spain has promised to
provide with the necessary finance for establishing a new exchange, with a high
capacity to serve subscribers, in Al Diwaneya province (170 km south of
Baghdad).
Italians are contributing to the reconstruction of the
south:
Italy has allocated 2.18 million euros
[$2.68 million] for development in Iran's southern Nasiriya province, where
most of the Itaiy's [sic] 3,000-stong military contingent in Iraq is based.
"The funds will be used in Nasiriya and surroundings for several projects
in the fields of health, education, drinkable water and infrastructures,
including roads, sport facilities and the sewage system," Ahmad al-Shaykh
Ali, the deputy governor of Dhi Qar region--under whose jurisdiction Nasiriya
falls--told Adnkronos International (AKI). The project areas will jointly
identified by the Italian army and the regional council.
Judicial infrastructure is also rising:
Construction is complete on phase one of
the $865,000 Basrah courthouse project. This five-phase project is
expected to be complete in October. The main courthouse, expected to hold a
number of high profile trials, continues to operate during construction. Iraqi
subcontractors are working on the project, and employing an average of 70 local
Iraqi workers daily.
The cleanup
of Iraq continues:
Rakan Ahmed Al
Allaf, director of the general municipalities' administration in the ministry
of municipalities and general works said, "Al Wehda municipality has
lifted 1800 tons of garbage, 1400 m3 [370,000 gallons] of debris, 100 tons of
wastes and has filled up 150 m3 [40,000 gallons] of swamps.
He added Al Zohur municipality has lifted
840 tons of garbage, 500 m3 [130,000 gallons] of debris and 40 tons of wastes,
and has paved streets, filled up swamps with earth and finished the
municipality building." He pointed out, "Al Jisr municipality has
lifted the garbage and debris, which were accumulated in (101, 102, 103, 104
and 105) sites and Al Ta'mim district. It has lifted 1750 tons of garbage, 350
tons of debris, and 40 tons of wastes. It has also pulled the still rain water.
Al Yousefeya municipality has lifted 125 tons of garbage and 30 m3 [8,000
gallons] of debris, and has cleaned 2500 meters of roads. In Al Rashedeya
municipality, the districts of Al Zahra and Al Bad'a districts have been
cleaned in addition to Al Naheya region. Gardens, parks and platforms have also
been maintained."
Al Allaf pointed out, "These
municipalities managed to collect the rents of its real estate, lifted many
violations over its lands, committed dust and stone operations in various
districts to Iraqi contractors and companies to execute them."
A USAID program is helping local communities to carry out
projects:
USAID's
Community Action Program (CAP) helped a community in Maysan Governorate
rehabilitate its sports stadium. The 15,000 person stadium was built in 1959
and regularly hosted soccer and track and field competitions. However, during
the war between Iraq and Iran, the stadium was used as an Army arsenal and was
severely damaged during a bombardment, resulting in the closing of the
facilities. CAP contracted the rehabilitation and the community association
organized sports tournaments among the surrounding schools as part of its
contribution towards this project. The stadium was handed over to the
Directorate of Youth and Sports in May at an opening ceremony that drew many
spectators and participants. The project is expected to benefit over 2,000
people.
A Baghdad area kindergarten was rebuilt
with CAP assistance. The kindergarten was in a state of complete disrepair,
making it almost impossible for teachers to gauge the educational and emotional
development needs of the children. Classrooms were dark and damp and all
furniture was broken. Parent and community association members in the area
stressed to USAID the need to improve the facilities. The project was completed
on May 4 and included the complete rehabilitation of the premises. The
classrooms are now well lit, clean, and equipped with modern equipment. This
project will benefit 204 pre-school children.
CAP helped a community in At Tamim
governorate pave its sidewalks around the town center. Most of the roads are
not paved in this town in the southwest of the governorate causing flooding and
muddy conditions. With paved sidewalks, people can move freely in their town
and a heavy rainfall will not cause a local catastrophe.
The Iraqi authorities, in cooperation
with the United Arab Emirates are planning some health-related
projects:
A medical city and a faulty of medicine
would be established in Al Sadr city, and the Emirati authorities would start
establishing a medical city in Al Sadr city, which would include 4 big
hospitals, laboratories and a faculty of medicine. The construction of the two
hospitals in Thi Qar and Al Selaimania would start at the same time. He
specified the achievement date by a period of less than two years.
Another
two hospitals will be established with the American support in Maisan
province. Meanwhile, the authorities are setting up mobile
medical centers to provide care in areas of Baghdad with insufficient
health infrastructure:
In coordination
with a number of humanitarian, Baghdad health department has established
medical centers and camps in some poor districts in Baghdad to offer medial
assistance for the residents of these regions, which suffer from the spread of
epidemics and diseases, due to the contamination of water and the lack of
health services.
Dr. Ahmed Al Zubeidi confirmed that these
centers offer examinations and medical supplies for poor modest families in the
regions of Al Dawra, Al Amel district, Al Baya', Sowaib, Al Radwaneya, and
other regions, where there are no centers or hospitals for treating patients,
and epidemics and diseases have spread due to the poor health services. He
added that the mobile medical center includes more than five doctors of various
specialties, who offer their medical services to patients. Each center or
clinic can accommodate more than 600 patients. He pointed out that the majority
of cases received in the center are children's and elders' diseases, in
addition to the wounded.
Britain is involving its private sector in an effort to
help train Iraqi medical personnel:
The government
will today [Aug. 25] invite the private sector to compete with the NHS
[National Health Service] for a contract to help rebuild the health service in
Iraq.
About 50 medical teams will be invited to
come to Britain over the next two years to update their skills. But, in a sign
of the times, ministers think this assistance need not necessarily be provided
by the flagship hospitals of the NHS.
They publish tender documents today for a
"suitably qualified organisation or consortium" to arrange the
clinical training at an expected cost of up to £5m. Aid for healthcare in Iraq
has been directed at rebuilding hospitals and clinics. But discussions with
Iraqi officials have identified upgrading skills as the most productive
assistance.
The teams that come to Britain will be
expected to become "change agents" to spread reform on their return.
In education news, improvements in schools continue:
More than 600
children will return to renovated or rebuilt schools in Maysan province when
school starts this fall. This week, renovation on the Al-Eethnar Mud School was
completed, and the Al Eethar Mud School was replaced at a cost of $87,000,
benefiting 500 students who attend classes there.
Eight newly built schools in Wassit and
Babil provinces are receiving new furniture before the start of the school
year. Each of the school projects will receive office desks and chairs, file
cabinets and new student desks. Collectively, 400 three-student desks will be
proportionally divided among the schools, based upon the number of students.
In other news:
Dr. Abdel Falah Hassan Al Sudani,
education minister, confirmed that the ministry has decided to establish four
model schools in each province. He added that these schools would be
similar to Baghdad College, upon technical and scientific specifications. He
added that the ministry is currently coordinating with international
authorities and humanitarian organizations for the purpose of including a great
number of schools in several Iraqi regions. The minister pointed out that the
ministry is currently establishing more than 400 schools, upon new engineering
and constructional criteria.
USAID's Higher Education and Development program is helping to
build ties between American and Iraqi universities to help rebuild the
country's higher education system. Among the recent initiatives:
A fifth Iraqi
archaeology student has arrived at the State University of New York's Stony
Brook (SUNY/SB) campus. His English skills are in need of significant
improvement but should improve during English training in the summer and fall
semesters to be able to progress into the M.A. program in Archaeology in the
Spring 2006 semester. . . .
On July 2, the International Human Rights
Law Institute (IHRLI) at DePaul University's College of Law and the School of
Law at a northern Iraqi university hosted the opening of newly renovated law
library facilities. . . .
A soil sciences laboratory has been set
up at a central Iraqi university with the assistance of the HEAD program's Al
Sharaka partnership, a cooperative effort between five Iraqi Universities and a
consortium of American universities led by the University of
Oklahoma. . . .
Three boxes of learning materials arrived
recently for distribution at two Colleges of Agriculture and Forestry at
northern Iraqi universities.
Electrical projects
are progressing across the country:
More
reconstruction projects in Sadr City started this week, including a $13 million
electrical distribution project. When the project is complete, an estimated
128,000 more people will have a reliable source of electricity. The project
includes installation of power lines, 3,040 power poles, 80 transformers, 2,400
street lights, and power connections to individual homes, complete with meters.
Construction started on the $3.8 million
Al Rayash Electricity Substation project in the Al Daur district of Salah Ad
Din province, located between Tikrit and Bayji. The project, expected to be
complete in early December, will provide reliable service to 50,000 Iraqi homes
and small businesses. An electric distribution and street lighting project in
Daquq was completed on Aug. 17, providing new overhead distribution lines and
street lighting in the community.
Meanwhile, the construction of
electricity system in Fallujah is now 90% complete and should be finished by
mid-September. And Iran will be selling 600
power generators to Iraq.
Work continues on various water projects
in Salahedin
province:
Engineer Ghazi Naji, assistant of the
water general manager in the ministry of municipalities and public works said
that the works have included repairing broken pipes of various diameters in
Biji, Al Dur, Al Tuz and maintaining and repairing the pipes, pulling stations,
control panels, washing pumps, filters, and chlorine devices in the water
projects of Biji, Al Dur, Al Tuz and Al Sherqat.
Meanwhile, in the capital:
About 2 million people will benefit from
the Baghdad trunk sewer line, which was completed this week.
Workers cleaned and repaired the Baghdad trunk sewer line and its associated
manholes and pumping stations. The $17.48 million project restored principal
sewage collection elements in the Adhamiya, Sadr City and Nissan districts of
Baghdad, and will provide for the intended sewer flows to the Rustamiya
wastewater treatment plant.
And in Basra:
Two million dollars of Iraq
Reconstruction Program money was released to purchase electrical equipment for
a Pump Station to upgrade Basra Sweetwater Canal system. This pump station will
supply a constant and reliable source of water for two million Iraqis in Basra
and the surrounding area.
Also:
The Ministry of Environment announced a project
to control the quality of the drinking water for Iraq, which is aided by the
World Health Organization. Nahla Hatim, manager of the project, said the cost
of the project, which includes laboratory work and installing laboratories for
environmental tests, is $2 million and will help out in protection of the
environment and the water resources.
USAID is promoting the best agricultural practice throughout the country:
The Agriculture Reconstruction and
Development for Iraq (ARDI) program's recent winter crop demonstration showed
that the modernized farming methods used produced crop yields that were an
average of 48 percent higher than fields planted using traditional methods.
Under the program, ARDI and the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) planted 40
demonstration areas on the fields of cooperating farmers in Sulaymaniyah,
Arbil, and Da-huk. Each area contained two one-hectare plots; one planted using
traditional practices and the other using modernized practices. . . .
A total of 1,219 farmers and agriculture students participated in the field
days.
In other recent USAID initiatives:
Tomato farmers
are harvesting higher yields thanks to improved technologies learned under the
Open Field Tomato Demonstration initiative of USAID's Agriculture
Reconstruction and Development for Iraq (ARDI) program. For the demonstrations,
ARDI established plots in Baghdad, Diyala and Babylon governorates on which
they introduced drip irrigation, black plastic mulch, and fertilization. With
the Ministry of Agriculture, USAID representatives monitored the plots and
helped participating farmers control tomato pests. . . .
A new sustainable fodder project in Wasit
governorate will help livestock breeders improve the health and productivity of
their sheep flocks. The project, which is sponsored by the ARDI program,
focuses on farmers who tend flocks of 30 to 150 head of sheep, providing them
with fodder for temporary relief and training in fodder
production. . . .
An ARDI program to improve buffalo
calving rates through hormone treatments is showing positive results. The
program is being implemented in Baghdad, Muthanna and Dhi Qar governorates
where buffalo sometimes do not enter estrus during the hot season because of
climactic stress, and may not successfully mate or produce milk.
A Connecticut man,
meanwhile, has been working to revive Iraqi beekeeping:
Hundreds of
honeybees swarm around the 3-foot-high wooden hive in the suburban backyard at
33 Kettle St.
Flying in and out of narrow slits in the
box-like structure, they form a buzzing cloud around Andrew Cote, who is trying
to avoid being stung a seventh time.
"Mother of God," he says, his
deadpan voice belying the pain of the sixth sting.
Cote has at least two stings on his
underarms and one on his lower back, areas not covered by the mesh hood he
donned minutes ago, as the bees became more agitated. "I got twice as many
stings today as I did in two months in Iraq."
The 34-year-old Norwalk native returned
on Aug. 11 from an aid mission to Iraq, where he spent the summer sharing
his knowledge of bees and pollination with Iraqi farmers and beekeepers.
During the trip, sponsored by the U.S.
Agency for International Development, heavily armed guards swarmed around him as
he traveled from city to city in a convoy of armored vehicles.
With estimates that as much as 80 percent
of everything humans eat depends on pollination by bees, Cote said, restoring
and improving agriculture in the war-ravaged country depends heavily upon the
men, and a few women, who Cote helped train during his 10-week trip.
A new survey will
help Iraq better manage its scarce water:
Ministry
representatives met to discuss the progress of the Strategy for Water and Land
Resources in Iraq.
All participating ministries are
collecting data relevant to water and land use, including hydrologic and hydro
geologic information, water quality and crop-water requirements. This data will
be used to analyze specific interventions and strategy
priorities. . . .
The Strategy for Water and Land Resources
in Iraq will serve as the first inclusive planning document for Iraq's water
sector since 1982. Through the planning process the Iraqi government will
determine the availability of water resources. The strategy will then enable
coordination between ministries and governorates to allocate those water
resources. The strategy will also provide a foundation for continued
restoration of the Southern Marshlands, and provide the Iraqi government with a
strong position when negotiating international water treaties with its
neighbors.
More good news for
the southern marshlands and wetlands once drained by Saddam as
punishment for their rebellious inhabitants:
The Iraqi water
minister Abd al-Latif Jamal Rashid has given the go ahead to an ambitious plan
to build modern villages around the lakes in the south of the country and turn
them into tourist areas. Announcing the plan, the ministry's spokesman told
Adnkronos International (AKI): "the ministry has confirmed the start of
work on different projects in those areas, with the financial and technical
support of the US government in the context of the donation made to the Iraqi
government," amounting to 450 million dollars.
It follows an announcement last week by
the water ministry that the Treasury had agreed to increase the money earmarked
for the relaunch of the marshlands in the south of the country to 300 billion
Iraqi dinars (one US dollar is roughly the equivalent of 1,470 Iraqi dinars).
This money will also be used to carry out the projects to develop the lakes,
which will be re-filled using fluvial channels.
As to the marshes themselves:
The ancient
Iraqi marshlands drained by Saddam Hussein as punishment against their
occupants are back to almost 40 percent of their former level, the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Wednesday.
In a rare good news story for Iraq,
Nairobi-based UNEP said latest satellite imagery showed a 'phenomenal' recovery
rate for the southern marshlands, back to almost 3,500 square km after
dwindling to just 760 in 2002. . . .
UNEP said the marshlands totalled almost
9,000 square kilometres [3,500 square miles] in the 1970s--one of the world's
largest wetlands with rare species like the Sacred Ibis bird.
While satellite images showed wetland
cover back to nearly 40 percent of that in August, the figure was closer to 50
percent back in the Spring thanks to winter rains and snow melt in the
headwaters of the Tigris and Euphrates, UNEP said.
"The new satellite imagery shows a
rapid increase in water and vegetation cover over the last two years," it
added in a statement. "While more detailed field analysis of soil and
water quality is needed to gauge the exact state of rehabilitation, UNEP
scientists believe the findings are a positive signal that the Iraqi marshlands
are well on the road to recovery."
Toepfer, however, warned that full
reflooding would still take 'many years' and must be carefully nurtured.
With foreign
assistance, Iraqi environmental specialists are getting trained:
A Lab Technician
training course to be held in Amman, Jordan, in early September is being
planned for technicians from Iraq's five regional Environmental Health
Education Resource Centers (EHERC).
The course is being sponsored by the U.S.
Agency for International Development (USAID) Higher Education and Development
(HEAD) program which supports a partnership between the State University of New
York at Stony Brook (SUNY/SB) and several Iraq universities to build capacity
for teaching and research in environmental health. . . .
Workshop topics include training on
equipment for soil, water, and lead testing; and the operation of air pollution
monitoring equipment.
• Humanitarian
aid. The U.N. World Food Program is helping Iraq's most vulnerable and
needy:
Support to
Vulnerable groups--A total of 21,576 [metric tons] of commodities (7,781 mt
High Energy biscuits, 5,791 mt wheat flour, 3,166 mt vegetable oil and 4,838 mt
pea/wheat blend) have so far been dispatched into Iraq under WFP's current
emergency operation 10360.0.
Distributions so far amount to about
14,946 mt of the total dispatched commodities benefiting 1,324,740
beneficiaries. The present security situation continues to affect the overland
transport of food into Iraq.
Food for education--Preparations are
underway to preposition the High Energy Biscuits and vegetable oil for the
children when the schools re-open in September after the end of the summer
holidays.
During the last school year about 8,886
mt (7,781mt of HEB and 1,105 mt of veg. oil) have been delivered into various
schools in Iraq with approximately 5,201mt of High Energy Biscuits and 806 mt
of vegetable oil distributed under school feeding activities benefiting 806,558
school children. . . .
Vulnerable Group Feeding--A total of
12,690 mt of various commodities including Wheat Flour, Vegetable Oil and
Pea-Wheat blended food have been delivered into Iraq with 8,939 mt having been
distributed to 518,182 beneficiaries.
A charity is helping
Iraq's disabled:
Free Wheelchair
Mission recently shipped a container of 550 wheelchairs to the port of
Shuwaikh, Kuwait in a momentous humanitarian mission to aid Iraq's disabled and
poor. United States Military Major Glenn Rubalcava, Public Health Officer
stationed in Kuwait City, coordinated the compassionate effort through the
Humanitarian Operations Center (HOC) located in Kuwait.
Both the Iraqi and Kuwaiti governments
waived import fees for all the humanitarian aid that involved the HOC. The
wheelchairs were convoyed from Kuwaiti to Iraqi military bases and then were
picked up from the military bases by civilian contractors. The civilian
contractor transportation companies then delivered the wheelchairs from the
military bases to their final destinations throughout five geographical
locations in Iraq. Wheelchairs were distributed to camps, hospitals, clinics,
and orphanages throughout the country.
200 wheelchairs were distributed to the
British and Polish sector (southern Iraq), which includes An-Najaf,
Ad-Diwaniyah, An-Nasirayah and Al-Basrah. 300 wheelchairs went to the Iraqi
Assistance Center (IAC) in Baghdad. They will distribute to Civil Affair units
in Fallujah, Ramadi, Baghdad, and Samarra.
Iraqi authorities
will be constructing three major housing complexes for Iraqi refugees who chose
to return home.
The good work of one Colorado business continues to bring cheer to Iraqi
schoolchildren:
A small girl,
not much older than 6 or 7, struggled with a math lesson at her school
northeast of Baghdad, Iraq.
The subject was not the reason for the
girl's frustration; she was equipped with only a broken pencil and a few pieces
of paper.
A U.S. soldier visiting the school in the
Diyala province of eastern Iraq saw the students' dilemma and decided to do
something about it.
"I was very sad for her because she
reminded me of my daughter, and I wanted to do as much as I could to help these
children," said Army Spec. Steven Wilkerson.
The young soldier, a member of the Army's
"Battle Boar" 1st Battalion, Googled for help.
EZ School Supplies, based in the Denver
West Office Park in Golden, popped up on the Internet search engine. In May,
Wilkerson e-mailed the company to see if it would donate some school supplies.
"The local schools do not have funds
to purchase supplies, as they are very impoverished," Wilkerson wrote for
his commander, Lt. Col. Roger Cloutier.
Officials of EZ School Supplies, a
company formed just two years ago by a 2000 graduate of Golden High School,
were excited by the request.
The rest in history:
EZ partners with
the Learning Legacy Foundation, which specializes in providing supplies to
underprivileged students.
Tapping into that connection, EZ sent 35
packs of pencils, paper, erasers and folders to the 1st Battalion's 30th
Infantry, which is serving a 12- to 14-month tour in Iraq.
Students who received the first shipment
got "very excited and are extremely happy," wrote Wilkerson, who
responded by sending photos of smiling schoolchildren.
Other actions to help Iraqi children are also bearing
fruit:
A request for
assistance for children in Iraq sent home from a 36th Division soldier has
generated overwhelming response, according to a member of his family.
"The response has been almost
overwhelming," Charles Snow, the grandfather of SPC Adam Gregory, said Thursday.
"We are extremely grateful for all the donations."
Gregory's letter was quoted in a
Brownwood Bulletin story published Aug. 6.
A deadline of Friday, Aug. 26 has been
set for the donations so they can be boxed for shipment to Iraq.
Gregory has been stationed in Iraq since
January, and he said he has a special feeling for the children.
Snow said some donations of adult shoes
have been received, but children's items are especially sought. Even used shoes
are acceptable, if they are clean. Cash donations will be used to pay postage
for shipping.
A joint Iraqi-American effort is also helping children:
Children in a village of Tamim province
received school supplies, clothing and toys from the Nahrain Foundation, a
nongovernmental organization that focuses on providing proper nutrition, decent
clothing and medical supplies to Iraqi women and children. The foundation
received its supplies as part of a joint effort between American donations and
a coalition forces-run program known as "Operation Provide School
Supplies," which accepts donations from private citizens and corporations
in the United States.
And Mennonite Central Committee is
helping Iraqi schoolchildren:
MCC is shipping 4,200 relief kits and
24,000 school kits to Iraq, which continues to be troubled by violence and
instability. The relief kits will be distributed to Iraqis who have been
displaced to camps by urban warfare, and the school kits will be distributed to
children in low-income neighborhoods of Baghdad. The total value of the
shipments is $442,000 Cdn./$360,000 U.S.
Meanwhile, Louisiana
shows that it has a heart:
In bringing a
young Iraqi to this country for a critically needed operation, Tulane
University's medical center and Louisianians serving in Iraq are showing that
this country has a big heart.
An 8-year-old Iraqi boy will undergo
surgery at Tulane to repair a hole in his heart.
Operation Mend a Heart was inspired by
one of our own, Lt. Col. Mark Matthews of Denham Springs, who recently returned
from a nine-month tour of duty in Iraq.
Earlier this year, Matthews, while
stationed at U.S. Central Command in Qatar, helped arrange for a 5-year-old
Iraqi girl and her father to be transported to this country so she could
undergo heart surgery at Maine Medical Center in Portland. The surgery was
completed successfully in February.
Matthews' wife, Toni, a surgical nurse,
nicknamed that effort "Operation Have a Heart to Save a Heart." It's
now evolved into a joint project of the U.S. military, Tulane Hospital and
Clinic and Tulane Health Sciences Center.
"It is a project of the heart,"
Mark Matthews said.
The Chicago Rotarians
are also helping:
Ali Ayad is only
9, yet he wears a colostomy bag and has a heart filled with holes. He lives in
Baghdad in a single room of a small house shared by 16 other people. He arrived
Monday at O'Hare Airport after 25 hours of travel. Yet, many could learn something
from Ali, who refused a wheelchair as he walked onto American soil for an
operation that could change his life. . . .
Ali and Masuma Hmod, 11 months old, both
from Iraq, are in Chicago for surgeries to correct a congenital heart defect
known as tetralogy of Fallot. . . .
Ali and Masuma are being sponsored by the
Rotary Club's Gift of Life program. It helps bring children from developing
countries to modern health-care facilities, said Dr. George Harris, a local
Rotary official and a pediatrician at Advocate Hope Children's Hospital in Oak
Lawn, where the two youngsters' surgeries are to be performed.
The Iraqi-American Association of
Illinois was a primary donor for the children's trip. Other donors include
Rotary Clubs in Hinsdale and Orland Park and 10 Roman-Catholic churches.
Rotarians donated nearly 500,000
frequent-flier miles to buy tickets for the children and their companions:
Ali's aunt, Nadia Murzoq; Masuma's mother and two Iraqi physicians who are
accompanying them, Abdul Raheem Daoud and Mohammad Jassim Hassan Ali Nassir.
There will be more
help for Iraqi patients, thanks to this initiative:
Next month, an
international medical team consisting of 60 specialists in cardiac surgery and
the technology of operations' equipments would arrive in Iraq for erecting a
field station to conduct such surgeries for several Iraqi citizens who are
suffering from heart diseases and the current events are hindering executing
such operations.
Sheikh Ali Al Ka'bi, director of the
Emirati Red Cross in Iraq, said in a statement that the team would include
global surgeons from all over the world and specialists in equipments and
anesthesia. The field hospital would be established to execute heart operations
in Ibn Al Bitar Hospital in Al Karkh region in Baghdad.
• Coalition
troops. They're active on the ground in Diyala
province:
Soldiers from
1st Battalion, 30th Infantry, Task Force Liberty are working with the people of
the Diyala Province to build schools, improve the water supply, pave roads and
rebuild their local government.
Coalition Soldiers are providing Iraqis
with money to improve their way of life and, in order to ensure projects in the
Diyala Province are progressing on schedule, Soldiers conduct routine checks of
these sites.
The work the Soldiers are doing is
helping to rebuild the city services, said 1st Lt. Jeremy Krueger,
civil-military operations officer for Task Force 1-30, and native of Pensacola,
Fla.
"I think the projects in our [area
of operations] are important," said Krueger. "What we are doing is
improving the infrastructure for this whole area that has been torn down over
the last several years. It's helping the population immensely. It is providing
new schools for them, new roads, new water projects, water supplies that they
have never had and also some of the projects are businesses that are going to
provide some revenue for the area."
The unit is still working on developing
more projects in order to better the area, said Sgt. Maj. Matthew J. West,
civil-military operations sergeant major for Task Force 1-30 and a native of
Dallas, Texas.
We have 83 projects that have been submitted
or are currently underway, West said.
According to Army
Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, reconstruction of Fallujah is going well:
Reconstruction
is seeing some "amazing" progress, Lynch pointed out.
"Last November, there were
significant military operations in (Fallujah)," he said. "By this
November we will have completed 438 projects totaling $71.3 million and will
continue the progress with an additional 19 projects worth over $65 million
after the elections."
The people of Fallujah, he said, have
reliable access to electricity and water, and can send their children to one of
the 49 schools now open. Fallujans also will soon have their own TV and radio
station.
The troops continue
to work on important water infrastructure projects:
In Iraq, where
even water that comes from the tap could be contaminated with chemicals or
sewage seeping into the ground, clean water is the most basic need of people
throughout the country.
While there is an adequate supply of
bottled water, water for cooking, cleaning and bathing is a precious commodity.
In many cases, wells have not been dug deep enough to go below the contaminated
ground water.
Under the $18 billion Iraq Reconstruction
Program, 184 public works and water projects are planned, including 158 water
treatment facilities, two sewage treatment plants and 11 water resource projects.
The Corps of Engineers and Project Contracting Office program contracts the
work out to local laborers, with the Corps of Engineers Gulf Region District
overseeing the construction.
Read about some of the projects currently
on the way, for example:
A massive $125 million water treatment
plant in Ifraz will pump treated water about 20 miles southeast to the more
than 900,000 residents of the city of Irbil.
In other recent water-related
projects financed and overseen by the military:
Officials from
[Iraq and the U.S.] also signed a charter to detail plans to bring much-needed
projects to the people of Husseiniya, an agricultural town north of Baghdad
whose population boomed during the previous regime. Coalition Forces are
working with the Ministry of Municipalities and Public Works to build storm
drainage projects, water-quality improvements, and most importantly, sewage
treatment facilities. The Husseiniya Charter is the first of its kind in the
area, and will serve as the test-bed and guide for other projects in
impoverished areas in and around Baghdad. . . .
Iraqi workers in Baghdad finished the
$3.6M Al Amari Water Distribution project this week. The project can produce approximately
250 cubic meters of potable water daily and service about 2,000 families in the
Al Amari and 9-Nissan areas of Baghdad.
The troops are also building roads:
The U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, Gulf Region South District (GRS) has been working on modern
asphalt roads in Najaf to facilitate agriculture sales and to provide better
routes to village schools and hospitals.
"GRS is currently managing the
construction of two village road projects in the Najaf Province," said Art
Bennett, GRS Transportation and Communication Sector project manager. "The
roads serve small villages and local industries--in this case, cement and
gypsum plants. The second project, or segment, parallels the Euphrates
River."
Bennett said that segment one--the
Alhaydariya village road--is about 15 kilometers long and costs $1.2 million.
The contract was modified and extended to move power poles away from the
shoulder of the road, and to create that shoulder. The modifications also
included the shoring up of water pipelines that were unsupported off the side
of the road. The additional money is $18,000. He added that the project is 40
percent complete. Total cost of the project with the modifications is $1.3
million.
Segment two, the Al-Cement factory
village road, is about seven kilometers long at $337,697. Also modified because
of power pole and water pipe issues, the additional allocated money is about
$12,000. It is about 38 percent complete. Total cost of the project is about
$348,000.
"The intent of these projects is to
provide paved roads for everyday use by the local population," said
Bennett.
Work on water infrastructure also continues:
Three
governorates will be receive upgrades in treated potable water, according to an
announcement August 18 by a team of Iraqi and U.S. government entities.
From the $18.4 billion allocated for the
total Iraq Reconstruction Program, about $3 million is budgeted for bringing
treated potable water to approximately 25,000 Iraqi citizens in the Dahuk,
Babylon and Wassit Governorates. The projects will upgrade 15 systems, each
including water wells, compact potable water treatment plants and pumps.
The contracts were competed and awarded
to local Iraqi contractors, with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
providing quality assurance oversight. Each of the 15 sites will employ
approximately 20 Iraqi laborers on a daily basis.
The work will also train local operators
on site in the technology and maintenance of the water systems. Completion
dates for the 15 projects vary, but all are scheduled to be finished by January
2006.
Army surveyors are also laying groundwork for future
reconstruction and infrastructure expansion:
The weight of
their body armor combined with the strain of having to lift a jackhammer over
their heads makes their arms quiver like jello. Sweat pours down their faces
and burns their eyes, but they won't stop now. They can't.
One after another, they connect four-foot
stainless steel rods together and drive them further below the surface of the
earth. Thirteen rods and 52 feet later, the rods refuse to be driven any
further.
The engineers assigned to Multinational
Corps-Iraq then cover the exposed tip of the rod with a custom access cover and
insert a fluorescent orange sign to indicate the location is ready to be
surveyed.
The team of U.S. and British Army
geodetic surveyors has successfully established another reference point along
the road to reconstruction in Iraq, one of many in the first Iraqi Geospatial
Reference System that identifies geospatial locations using names or numeric
coordinates.
Coalition and Iraqi engineers use the
data collected by Iraqi Geospatial Reference System to create accurate maps of
Iraq and safely rebuild the country's roads, bridges and pipelines.
"Establishing a geospatial reference
system is the first and most crucial step to reconstructing Iraq," said
U.S. Army Sgt. Motaz Mostafa, noncommissioned officer-in-charge of one of six
Multinational Corps-Iraq geodetic survey teams and assigned to the 175th
Engineer Company, 20th Engineer Brigade, Fort Bragg, N.C.
The joint coalition team began working on
the project in April, which is modeled on the National Spatial Reference System
in the United States.
Geospatial reference systems have already
proven to be quite effective in helping the United States and several other countries
in Central and South America, Africa and Eastern Europe recover from natural
disasters like hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes. War-torn countries like
Iraq require the same geospatial reconstruction, said U.S. Army 1st Lt. Kenneth
Joyce, Iraqi Geospatial Reference System project leader assigned to the175th
Engineer Company.
The troops are
working on Iraqi hospitals:
U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers Gulf Region South District estimates a Dec. 25 completion of a
refurbishment and renovation project for the Najaf Maternity Hospital.
Engineers report the $8.2 million project
is 30 percent finished.
The project began Oct. 25, 2004.
Renovations include a new sewage system,
a new boiler for heating, ceramic tiles throughout all of the renovated
portions of the facility and a new residents' office. A reverse osmosis water
treatment plant for the hospital is finished and is ready to be turned over to
the hospital. An incineration system is also in the works.
Similar renovations continue at Najaf
teaching hospital two kilometers away from the maternity hospital.
The 266-bed hospital continues patient
care even while renovations continue.
More about the
Maternity Hospital project here.
And here's an update on the Teaching
Hospital:
From a bloody
battlefield and one of the most dangerous places in Iraq to a safe, prosperous
and growing community of over one-half million, the Najaf Teaching Hospital
reflects the changes of the city of Najaf.
One year ago on August 27 the battle for
Najaf ended.
A year ago the Najaf Teaching Hospital
was closed. It had been looted and its medical equipment destroyed by the Sadr
Militia who had used its eight floors as a military fortress. Its basement
flooded, windows and walls riddled with bullet and mortar damage, to many in
Najaf, the hospital looked hopeless.
Now the hospital is open, seeing hundreds
of patients per day and housing 80 in-patients. It is a training hospital for
200 medical students, 50 pharmacy students, and 100 resident doctors who are
looking forward to improved and expanded services.
This is a true success story brought
about by a close partnership of Iraqi doctors and a U.S. team of doctors,
engineers, project managers, contractors, and Soldiers and U.S Army Corps of
Engineers civilians. When finished, the hospital will house a new magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scanner, have computed tomography (CT) scan services,
and have increased specialty surgical services including its first open heart
surgical team.
The hospital will employ 1,250 people, in
an area where good jobs are hard to come by.
The troops continue
to fill in the gaps in medical care by conducting visits to
locations with limited access to health care:
U.S. soldiers
from the 116th Brigade Combat Team's Task Force 1-163 Infantry delivered
much-needed medical care to the village of Husseinia, Iraq, Aug. 1.
The medical assistance visit was done at
the remote village because of the lack of availability of medical care. Many
smaller villages in the western portion of Kirkuk Province are far from
hospitals and medical clinics.
"The visit was intended to be a
mini-(medical assistance visit) but it turned out to be a full-blown (medical
assistance visit)," said U.S. Army Capt. Jeff Westfall, the Task Force
1-163 Infantry officer. "We were expecting maybe 30 patients, but we ended
up with over 100."
According to Task Force 1-163 Infantry,
some villagers may not see health care professionals for years at a time,
making it tough on the community and particularly the young. The task force
also credits the success of the visit to the improved security provided by an
ever-growing number of Iraqi security forces in the area.
Here's a similar operation in Mosul:
More than 200 Iraqi children received
medical screenings from Coalition Forces, with support from Iraqi Police,
during an operation Aug. 5 in western Mosul. Soldiers and medics handed
out soccer balls and hygiene products to the local children while they
conducted the screenings. More than 1,000 children have received medical
screenings during this and four similar operations over the last three weeks.
The troops continue to support the
reconstruction of the education system:
Approximately 18,000 Iraqi schoolchildren
will sit in freshly refurbished schools when their new school year starts in
about six weeks. Iraqi and U.S. government agencies announced Aug. 6 that
renovations of 43 schools in the northern and southern provinces are funded for
repairs, and contracts have been awarded for the work. As part of the Iraq
Relief Reconstruction Fund, over $1.3M was set aside to continue a nationwide
school repair program that addresses rehabilitating sanitary facilities,
electrical and mechanical systems, and structural repairs to schools in
Karbala, Dahuk, Najaf, Basrah, and Qadisiyah.
The 155th Brigade Combat Team, meanwhile,
is doing a lot of community outreach, in addition to its important security
work:
The 155th is
attached to the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force and operates in the Karbala,
Najaf and Babil provinces of Iraq. Blanton said each unit in the brigade has
adopted at least one school in its area of operations and the soldiers
distribute school supplies, furniture, medicine and other goods.
The unit's commander, Brig. Gen. Augustus
Leon Collins, hopes a pen pal program the unit plans to facilitate for American
and Iraqi children will offer a bridge between two diverse cultures.
"I believe it is critical that we
expand the horizons of not only Iraqi youth, but American youth as well,"
he said this past week in an e-mail to The AP. "If we are able to
establish a campaign where our children are introduced to theirs, then we will
remove the stigmas and bias and possibly develop a bond that will be much
stronger than any military or diplomatic action."
In the Karbala Province, members of the
2nd Battalion, 114th Field Artillery of the Mississippi National Guard, which
is attached to the 155th, identified a substandard facility that housed
orphaned girls.
Lt. Col. Gary E. Huffman said the
soldiers teamed with Iraqi security forces to rebuild the orphanage and
delivered 50 beds and mattresses, bed linens, clothes and toys.
"The work is continuous and through
cooperation, mutual understanding, and robust work efforts Karbala will grow
and achieve the success that the citizens and leadership seek," Huffman
said.
Collins said projects to rebuild schools
and orphanages are imperative because "the future of this nation lies in
its youth. What direction this country takes will be determined by them."
It's not just the
American troops. Australians have been making a positive contribution in the
south of the country:
Local forces
being trained by Australian troops in southern Iraq were close to taking over
responsibility for security in the area, the new head of the Defence Force, Air
Chief Marshal Angus Houston, said. . . .
Air Chief Marshal Houston told the Herald
Australian troops training Iraqi security forces in the province of Al Muthanna
had been very successful and the Iraqis would be ready to take over
responsibility for security for the entire province "in the not too
distant future."
He also praised another group of 50
Australian soldiers who had trained 750 Iraqi logisticians.
The Australian soldiers in Iraq had an
impressive ability to work with the Iraqis because they were "classically
Australian," Air Chief Marshal Houston said.
"It's really a very successful model
for how successful you can be in training the Iraqis.
"Our ability to engage them man to
man--it was very much a male-dominated environment I have to say.
. . . It was classically Australian; we weren't carrying any baggage
and we had established a very good relationship with them."
Italian soldiers, meanwhile, are protecting Iraq's
historical heritage:
Italian troops
stationed in the southern Iraqi city of Nasiriya, will provide 125,000 dollars
for the restoration of the local museum which has been looted and vandalised
since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime. "Work will be carried out by an
Iraqi company under the surpervision [sic] of the Italian military," the
museum's director, Abd al-Amir al-Hamdani, told Adnkronos International (AKI).
"Restoration will include the
building's first floor, with seven separate exhibition halls, including
prehistoric, Sumero-Babylonian, Assyric and Islamic sections, as well as
exhibition space on the second floor and the museum's library and the
administration offices," al-Hamdani explained.
Italian police are holding a training
course in Nasiriya for Iraqi guards who will be in charge of safeguarding their
country's museums and archaelogical [sic] sites.
Here's more on the Italian assistance:
The Italian contingent of Iraqi
multinational forces, based in Dhi Qar region of Nasiriya in southern Iraq will
supervise the construction of 60 desalinisation plants for the rural
population. The project, financed by donor countries, is needed because of the
increase in drinking water salt levels, explained Ali al-Dajili, an engineer
coordinating the project between the Italian forces and the provincial council.
Works will start in a month, he specified. . . . The desalinisation
plants, designed by Italian army's engineers, will be built in specific areas
along the Euphrates river which will be determined by the provincial council.
• Security. A new opinion poll
has been conducted between July 12 and 17 in Baghdad, Basrah, Salah Ad-Din,
Najaf, Diyala and Irbil, with more than 1,200 Iraqis participating:
An overwhelming
number of Iraqis say there is no justification for attacks on Iraqi civilians,
Iraqi security forces or Iraqi public service infrastructure. A total of 94
percent of Iraqis say there is no excuse for attacks on Iraqi security forces,
97 percent say there is no justification for attacking civilians, and 97
percent are against attacks on infrastructure.
The percentages slip when it comes to
disapproval of violence against Iraqis working with the coalition and attacks
against coalition personnel. A total of 81 percent of those polled are against
attacks against Iraqis working with the coalition, with 12 percent saying there
is justification for the attacks and 7 percent with no opinion.
One negative of the
poll: "Half of those polled said there was no excuse for attacks against
coalition personnel, while 40 percent said there is a justification and 10
percent saying they don't know":
Iraqis are proud
of their security forces--a sea change from the way most regarded the forces
under Saddam Hussein. The poll shows 75 percent of Iraqis say their security
forces are winning the fight against anti-government forces. Iraqis regard the
security forces as representing the nation and not just one group (77 percent),
and 73 percent of those polled believe the Iraqi police and military work
within the law and respect the rights of the people.
Almost 80 percent of those surveyed said
the sooner that Iraqi forces maintain security, the sooner coalition forces can
leave.
The poll showed some Iraqi
misperceptions, officials said. A total of 64 percent of those surveyed said
anti-government forces come mostly from other countries. Coalition officials
said most anti-government terrorists are Iraqis.
Finally, 62 percent of the Iraqis
surveyed said the security situation in Iraq has gotten "much better"
( 16 percent ) or "somewhat better" ( 46 percent ) in the past three
months. Twenty percent of those surveyed said the security situation was
"somewhat worse" and 14 percent said the security situation was
"much worse" than three months ago.
Iraqi authorities are at the moment
holding 281 foreign nationals in connection with terrorist
activities:
In a press conference, [Leith Kabba,
spokesman for the Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim Al Ja'fari] said, "Until
now, the number of foreign detainees involved in charges that are related, in a
way or another to terrorism, is 281." Kabba pointed out, "They are
from Egypt (80), Syria (64), Sudan (41), Saudi Arabia (22), Jordan (17), Libya
(7), Palestine (10), Algeria (7), Tunisia (6), Turkey (4), Iran (12), Qatar
(2), and Britain (1), in addition to other countries." He added,
"Most of the reporting about those came on behalf of citizens."
Baghdad's Sadr
City is now safer and better:
Patrols by U.S.
and Iraqi Army Soldiers have resulted in safer streets for the citizens of Sadr
City.
The once hotly-contested area is now
patrolled by troops from B Company, 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry, 2nd Brigade
Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division.
On July 28 the Soldiers performed a
neighborhood patrol designed to allow the Soldiers to become acquainted with
their new neighborhood.
"It's a lot of work, getting to know
a new sector--we gather intel on terrorist operations, assess how receptive the
locals are to our presence and develop informants," said 1st Lt. Jason
Schwab, platoon leader. "We try and impress upon them that it's in their
best interests to help us, because the people who kidnap and extort them are
the same ones planting bombs in the roads."
During the patrol, Schwab stopped at the
Al-Kanasa Police Station and spoke with a warrant officer about the
neighborhood.
"The people we talk to in the
neighborhood have been pretty helpful and want things to get better in
Sadr," said Sgt. Lee Minyard. "They're starting to realize we're here
to help them."
Minyard pulled security throughout the
patrol, which took the dismounted infantrymen through the streets and alleys of
Sadr.
"We tell people that it's up to them
to make a difference in their communities," said Staff Sgt. Christopher
Brisley, section leader. "They're so used to relying on one leader to make
all the decisions, but they're gradually taking the initiative."
And so is the once
infamous Haifa Street, thanks to the Iraqi security forces now in
control of the area:
Soldiers called
it the "Street of Death" and "Purple Heart Boulevard," a
3-mile-long residential corridor in central Baghdad that had become a shooting
gallery for insurgents. In 2004 alone, Haifa Street, once a coveted address for
the middle class, was the bloody site of more than 400 attacks on American and
Iraqi security forces. Many residents on the most troubled blocks fled their
homes, some of which were promptly commandeered as rebel sniper roosts.
An American-Iraqi military campaign begun
last year to retake the street seemed to bear fruit as insurgents were
captured, killed or driven out of the area. And on Feb. 6 the American command
handed over a cut of north-central Baghdad, including Haifa Street, to the 1st
Brigade, 6th Division, of the Iraqi army. This transfer made the 1st Brigade
the first and only Iraqi army unit to have control of its own battle space and
put it on the leading edge of the Bush administration's plan to have Iraqi
forces take responsibility for the country's security.
The good news for American officials, in
a war where territorial gains have been elusive, is that the Iraqi troops have
not lost ground on Haifa Street. Since the 1st Brigade took control, there have
been only three terrorist attacks along the street, and those came in the first
three weeks, commanders say.
Italians, meanwhile,
are finding that there has been a great improvement in security situation
around Nasiriyah:
The Italians
have overseen about $50 million worth of projects in Dhi Qar province, most of
them related to water or medical services because the hospital is one of the
most important in southern Iraq.
The lesson from Nasiriyah, [Lt. Col. Danico]
Presta and [Capt. Fabio] Pacelli said, is that things can change for the better
in Iraq, and can seem to do so all at once. The improvement happens when
security is good enough that reconstruction can take root and the people can
see improvement in their life. That begets more cooperation, and more
willingness to turn in spoilers and therefore even more security. It's a
formula that is being attempted all across Iraq with varying levels of success.
Iraq's reconstruction is not progressing
on a linear path. It is a delicate balance that once achieved and allowed to
mature, can yield results. The trick is lining up all the components.
One of the unique components in Dhi Qar
was the establishment two months ago of a 17-member reconstruction committee
separate from the political leaders in the province. The committee comprises
university professors, health care professionals, sheiks and engineers. No
improvement project is undertaken without the permission of the council, which
sets the priorities. Presta believes that sense of local control is a key to
success.
Generally in the south of the country:
The British
Royal Marine in charge of coalition operations in southeastern Iraq is
optimistic about ongoing efforts there to train Iraqi army and police forces to
eventually assume security duties.
"We have been able to force ahead
with the main effort, which is security sector reform," Maj. Gen. Jim
Dutton, commander of Multinational Division Southeast, told Pentagon reporters
via a video link from Basra.
Dutton's 13,000-plus-troop multinational
command is made up of 7,900 British troops, 3,000 Italians, 640 Australians,
622 Romanians, 562 Japanese, 388 Danes, 97 Czechs, 33 Lithuanians, five
Norwegians, and two Portuguese.
Those troops, along with Iraqi army and
police forces, are charged with providing security for four southeastern Iraqi
provinces, which make up an area half the size of Great Britain. Dutton's area of
operations contains the cities of Nasiriyah, Basrah, and Umm Qasr, Iraq's only
deep-water port. . . .
The general said he remains
"confident that southeastern Iraq will continue to develop."
"There is a real enthusiasm here for
the democratic process, and there was a very high turnout" for the January
2005 election, he said.
Dutton said there is "no shortage of
volunteers" who want to join the new Iraqi army, noting there are now
about 5,500 Iraqi soldiers in his sector. That number is expected to increase
to 9,000 soldiers next year, he said.
The new Iraqi police are receiving good
training at academies in Jordan or Baghdad, Dutton said. There are about 25,000
police in southeastern Iraq, he said, more than 14,000 of whom have received
training.
And security is also
improving in the northwestern Ninweh province:
Progress is
evident in that more than 60 election registrations sites have opened on time.
That has been possible through the combined efforts and partnership of the
Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, provincial governments and Iraqi
security forces, [Army Maj. Gen. David Rodriguez, commander of Multinational
Force Northwest and Task Force Freedom] said.
Gains also are being made despite the
insurgents' ongoing attempts to accomplish their objective of "destroying
the Iraqi nation and the people," he said. Since the election held in
January, for example, 62 mid- to high-level terrorist leaders have been
captured or killed in Nineveh province alone, including 44 since early
May. . . .
Insurgents' attempts to use improvised
explosive devices to their advantage also have been reduced, Rodriguez said.
Over the last three months the number and effectiveness of insurgent IEDs is
down by about 20 percent, he noted. The general attributes this to Iraqi and
coalition forces' better operations conduct, disruption of insurgent senior
leadership, less complex IED devices and more local tips. The seizing of several
large caches of bomb-making materials also has contributed to that decrease.
Najaf province,
meanwhile, is reporting a 90%
decline in crime over the July and August period.
The "Iraqification" of security
will be the key to the future of the country--and to the reduction of the
coalition presence. To that end, training of Iraqi army and police continues.
Army Lt. Gen. David Petraeus, commander of Multinational Security Transition
Command Iraq, recently spoke about the successes
and challenges of training Iraqi troops:
"I believe
that Iraqis will save Iraq," he told CNN in an interview and said the
United States has helped Iraqis help themselves.
"I think that over the course of the
past 15 months or so there has been enormous progress in doing just that,"
he said.
He said Iraqis and the Americans need to
work together.
"There's a great deal still to be
done," he said, "and it is a long-term endeavor that will require
persistence, patience and resilience because the enemy is going to do
everything that he can over the next several months to derail the constitutional
process and then derail the elections in mid-December."
Petraeus has said more than 110 Iraqi
police and army combat battalions are "in the fight"--a total of
178,000 trained and equipped forces--a vast increase since a U.S.-led invasion
toppled Saddam Hussein.
Pentagon officials, quoted in an August
news article on the Defense Department Web site, said "this time last
year, only one battalion was trained and equipped well enough to assist
coalition forces."
While $2 billion has been invested in
bolstering Iraqi security force infrastructure, more needs to be done, Petraeus
said, such as establishing logistics and combat service capabilities and
building an air force.
The first batch of
Iraqi soldiers have finished their training in
Britain:
The first Iraqi
soldiers to be trained for the country's new security force by the British Army
in the UK have taken part in a passing-out parade.
Thirty-five National Guardsmen spent the
last three months at the Infantry Battle School in Brecon, mid Wales.
They have been trained in military
planning and strategy in the hope that Iraqis will eventually take over the
Allies' peacekeeping role.
The guardsmen will start to instruct
other Iraqi recruits on their return.
The course, based around British Army
junior leadership training, took place in both Arabic and English and was said
to be tailored for the demands of working in Iraq.
More courses are on
the way. See also this profile:
Under Saddam
Hussein's regime, Durgar Jassim was a member of the Republican Guard's 10th
Armoured Division, which fought against the British south of Baghdad.
Yesterday, two years later, he was on the parade ground with his former enemy
as one of 35 junior officers and non-commissioned officers from the Iraqi army
who had completed a training course at the Infantry Battle School in Brecon,
central Wales.
Capt Jassim, 29, a soldier for 12 years,
said that training with men he had once fought was not a problem. "We are
not political persons; we are military professionals," he said through an
interpreter.
The newly-qualified instructors, who
marched to Arabic commands at their passing-out parade, will return to Baghdad
at the weekend to train the new generation of security forces.
And a young Iraqi
officer, who for security reasons chose to remain anonymous as Officer
Mohammed, received the Overseas Sword, the award for the outstanding foreign cadet at Britain's Sandhurst
military academy.
There is also training of trainers:
In Taji, Iraqi soldiers completed a
Strategic Infrastructure Battalion "train-the-trainer" course. The 90
graduates will go on to serve as instructors at an Iraqi Army training base. A
class of future Iraqi army noncommissioned officers graduated from their
primary leadership development course on Aug. 15 in Tikrit. Iraqi army unit
training also included combat lifesaving, staff training, computer skills and
weapons training.
In other training firsts:
The 1st Iraqi Army Brigade implemented
Iraq's first noncommissioned officers academy this week. Iraqi
soldiers from the most recent class were the last group to be instructed by the
U.S. soldiers who had developed the training. During Saddam's regime, an NCO
corps did not exist in the Iraqi army. The class will now be taught by NCOs
from the 1st Iraqi Army Brigade, who assisted earlier courses.
Iraq's air force is also rebuilding:
Now the site,
375 km [235 miles] southeast of Baghdad and once Saddam Hussein's centre of air
operations against Iran during the 1980-1988 war--is home to Air Force Squadron
23 and its three C-130 Hercules transport planes.
The US-donated planes are the backbone of
Iraq's new air force, which also includes a dozen light reconaissance [sic]
planes and another dozen helicopters spread across the country. Officials are
vague on numbers for security reasons.
Currently, 109 Iraqi students--all air
force veterans with years of experience--are learning how to maintain and fly
the Hercules fleet. The youngest trainee is 30. Others appear twice that age.
In law-enforcement news, "the Iraqi Police Service
graduated 239 police officers from advanced and specialty courses at the Adnan
Training Facility August 18, according to the Civilian Police Assistance Training
Team."
Fresh from training, more Iraqi security
forces are taking on responsibilities around the country. One of the new Iraqi
units has been making a difference in northwestern Iraq:
The U.S.
military has achieved major success in developing and training an Iraq Army
battalion.
U.S. officials said the success in the
training and deployment of the 1st Battalion of the 1st Brigade was
demonstrated in operations in the Mosul area. The reconstituted battalion, part
of the 3rd Iraqi Army Division, has operated its own personnel, intelligence
and logistics sections.
"This battalion is undoubtedly one
of the best in Tall Afar," Capt. Greg Mitchell, a U.S. company commander,
said. "It can maneuver on its own without American support. If it's going
to take control of the city, they'll require more training and assistance, but
they've made great progress."
The success of the battalion was cited
for the unraveling of the Al Qaida network led by Abu Mussib Al Zarqawi. Since
May 2005, Iraqi forces such as the 1st Battalion have played a major role in
capturing senior Al Qaida commanders in the Mosul area.
Iraq's coast guard is also slowly starting to make a
difference:
The Iraqi Coast Guard had a busy and
successful month of operations in July, according to their monthly operational
reporting to the Ministry of Interior. According to the report, the Iraqi Coast
Guard searched 183 barges and vessels in July, with 11 of these searches
resulting in the discovery of illegal documentation. In addition, 60 tons of
illegal fuel were confiscated along with AK-47 automatic rifles, ammunition and
fuel pumps. Six people were detained during the operations.
By mid-August, 100% of the coalition's brigade-level operations in Iraq
were conducted jointly with Iraqi forces.
Another first in the south:
Coalition forces turned over Camp Zulu in
As Suwayrah, Iraq, to the Iraqi Army Aug. 21. This is the first coalition
forces camp within the Multi-National Division Central's South area of
responsibility to be turned over to Iraq's 8th Division. The division's 3rd
Battalion, 3rd Brigade will be permanently housed there.
American forces have also withdrawn from two
bases in Najaf area.
Security infrastructure continues to be
created, like these facilities for the police:
Construction started on a Police
Facilities project in the Samarra District of Salah Ad Din Province. This
250-officer station in the northeast part of Samarra, which is a $4.3M
investment, will provide a presence in the city to help stabilize law and order.
The contractor employs 25 Iraqi workers, and the project is scheduled for
completion in November.
There is more:
A patrol station in the Karkh district of
Baghdad province was completed, as was a $390,300 border-post project on the
Saudi Arabian border. A division headquarters building for the Iraqi Army in
Salah Ad Din province was also completed this week. The $7 million project
includes a single-story building with a concrete roof and interior office space
to accommodate the unit. Additionally, a $2 million firing range in Taji was
completed this week.
Read also about the work of the 94th Engineer Battalion which has been doing much work on
upgrading security infrastructure around Mosul and in the western Iraq.
There is also smaller-scale assistance:
The Coalition's Multi-National Division
Central-South (MND CS) gave seven cars to Iraqi Police in the southern city of Ad
Diwaniyah August 16. The MND CS Civil Military Cooperation (CIMIC) team made
the transfer possible.
In stories of security cooperation from
the locals:
In other recent security successes:
Perhaps one day the press will end its
drumbeat of defeatism that so frustrates Maj. Leahy, so that he and his family
and friends can open the newspaper and get a balanced picture from Iraq. Just
remember where you heard it first.
Mr. Chrenkoff is an Australian blogger.
He writes at chrenkoff.blogspot.com.